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In Case You Missed It:

Translating good food into better diets

Published: September, 2005

Do the basics of healthy eating — more fruits, vegetables, good fats, whole grains, and healthful protein packages, and less of the not-so-good stuff — work for the heart? Indeed they do. A host of studies has shown that each of these elements, by itself, can lower cholesterol, blood pressure, and blood sugar; improve the flexibility of arteries; or protect against heart attack, stroke, and other forms of cardiovascular disease. Put various pieces together and the protective effect is even more powerful.

But how do you cook up a diet to help you counter or prevent heart disease? Four diets forged in rigorous clinical trials are the real McCoy. These are the DASH diet, a higher-protein diet, the cholesterol-lowering portfolio diet, and a Mediterranean-type diet.These four are much better for the heart than the average American diet. Yet each has its own subtle effects that, in some cases, could detract from the benefits, and none except the Mediterranean-type diet has been studied long enough to know exactly how it affects heart disease or survival.

Four for the heart

Here is a sketch of this quartet of carefully tested diets and how they stack up against heart disease.

A dose of DASH. The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension trial tested a diet that emphasized fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy foods and limited red meat, saturated fats, and sweets. Compared with an average American diet, the DASH diet lowered systolic blood pressure (the upper number of a blood pressure reading) by 5.5 points and diastolic pressure (the lower number) by 3 points. A low-sodium DASH diet worked even better. The DASH diet lowers levels of harmful LDL (bad) cholesterol and triglycerides, the main fat-carrying particles in the bloodstream. On the downside, it also reduces protective HDL ("good") cholesterol.

Help from protein. One of the diets tested in the Optimal Macronutrient Intake Trial to Prevent Heart Disease (OmniHeart, for short) replaced some carbohydrates of the DASH diet with additional good protein. This strategy lowered LDL and triglycerides and dropped blood pressure a bit more than the original DASH diet. But it, too, harmed HDL.

Improve your portfolio. Researchers at the University of Toronto created what they called a "dietary portfolio of cholesterol-lowering foods." It went after cholesterol by adding specific foods known to lower cholesterol: margarine enriched with plant sterols; oats, barley, psyllium, okra, and eggplant, all rich in soluble fiber; soy protein; and whole almonds. It substantially lowered LDL, triglycerides, and blood pressure, and did not harm HDL.

Mediterranean-type diet. The basics include fruits, vegetables, grains, beans, and nuts supplemented with some cheese or yogurt, fish, poultry, and eggs. It's beneficial across the board for cholesterol, blood pressure, and other cardiovascular risk factors. In one long-term study, heart attack survivors who followed a Mediterranean-type diet suffered far fewer heart attacks, strokes, or other cardiovascular problems than survivors following a standard low-fat diet.

Diet

Total cholesterol

LDL

HDL

Triglycerides

Blood pressure

Blood sugar

Average American diet

increase

increase

decrease

increase

increase

increase

DASH diet

decrease

decrease

decrease

same

decrease

?

OmniHeart higher protein

decrease

decrease

decrease

decrease

decrease

?

Portfolio diet

decrease

decrease

same

decrease

decrease

?

Mediterranean-type diet

decrease

decrease

increase

decrease

decrease

decrease

Bringing it home

These four diets are alike in many ways. They are heavy on food from plants (fruits, vegetables, beans, nuts, and seeds) and light on saturated fat, sodium, and sweets. They aren't vegetarian, although the portfolio diet comes pretty close.

The DASH and Mediterranean-type diets have been translated into popular books with meal plans and recipes. The OmniHeart and portfolio approaches haven't. From reports in medical journals, we've put together some daily meal plans that can give you ideas for setting up your own version (see "More information").

What about wine?

Alcohol, used judiciously, can be part of a heart-healthy diet. One or two drinks a day for men, and no more than one a day for women, appears to protect against heart attacks and other forms of heart disease.

Celebrating differences

The most encouraging finding from trials comparing weight-loss diets is that long-term weight loss can be accomplished a variety of ways. What's important is to find a plan you can stick with for a long lifetime.

December 2007 update

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